Military Wiki
Advertisement
Carl von Rabenhaupt
Freiherr von Sucha
Carel Rabenhaubt (Lambert Visscher)
A portrait of Carl von Rabenhaupt engraved by Lambert Visscher (1673)
Born (1602-01-06)January 6, 1602
Died August 12, 1675(1675-08-12) (aged 73)
Place of death Coevorden
Buried at Coevorden church
Allegiance Protestant: Saxon service (1620), Dutch service (1622-1633), Hessian service (1633-1648), Dutch service (1671-1675)
Years of service 1620–1648, 1671–1675
Rank lieutenant general
Commands held Governor of Kalkar (1641)
Battles/wars Siege of Bergen-op-Zoom (1622), Siege of Groenlo (1627), Capture of Maastricht (1632), Siege of Rheinberg (1633), Siege of Coesfeld (1634), Siege of Groningen (1672)

Carl von Rabenhaupt (Bohemia, 6 January 1602 - Coevorden, 12 August 1675) was a Bohemian Hussite nobleman who fought in Saxon, Dutch and Hessian service during the Thirty Years War and came out of retirement to command a Dutch regiment in the Franco-Dutch War.[1]

Thirty Years War[]

A Bohemian Hussite, Rabenhaupt went into exile for his religion in 1620, after the failure of the Bohemian Revolt, and entered Saxon service. By 1622 he had followed Ernst von Mansfeld into Dutch service. Taking part in a number of sieges in the Low Countries, he established his reputation in the trench warfare that was part of such sieges. In 1633 received an offer of service under William V, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel. Transferring to Hessian service he became governor of Kalkar in 1641.

Franco-Dutch War[]

Having retired from active service at the end of the Thirty Years War, Rabenhaupt was recruited by the Dutch in 1671 as colonel of his own regiment, later promoted to lieutenant general. He played an important role in the Siege of Groningen in 1672.

Death and commemoration[]

Rabenhaupt died at Coevorden on 12 August 1675 and was buried in Coevorden church on 3 September 1675.

A street in Groningen is named after him, and a sculpted bust is next to the town hall.

References[]

  1. A. J. van der Aa, Biographisch woordenboek der Nederlanden, vol. 10 (Haarlem, 1874), 5-7.

Gallery[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Carl von Rabenhaupt and the edit history here.
Advertisement